Putin Orders Yet Another "Humanitarian Ceasefire" In Aleppo

Nov. 2, 2016

Aleppo Media Center / AP

Russian President
Vladimir Putin has ordered his forces in Syria to open another series of humanitarian exit corridors from besieged east Aleppo, an
opposition stronghold, into areas outside of the city, the RBC news
outlet reported Wednesday, citing a Defense Ministry statement.

The humanitarian
ceasefire, as Russian officials are calling it, represents the latest
in a series of apparent attempts by Moscow to give rebels fighting in
the city and civilians caught in the crossfire an opportunity to
leave Aleppo. The city has been encircled and under siege since the
summer.

“In order to avoid
needless casualties, Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu on President
Putin's orders has decided to introduce a 'humanitarian ceasefire' in
Aleppo on Nov. 4 from 9 am to 7 pm,” the statement was quoted as
saying by RBC.

According to the
statement, the ceasefire has been approved by the government of
Syrian President Bashar Assad, who Russia supports. Last year, Russian air forces deployed to
Syria to reinforce his beleaguered military, which has been fighting opposition forces for five years.

Two weeks ago, a similar short ceasefire collapsed, with forces on both sides
downplaying the possibility for future attempts to halt the fighting
and give civilians time to leave the city. The breakdown was marked
by renewed fighting.

Moscow and Damascus
have blamed Washington for the continued failure of ceasefires. In their view, the U.S. has been unable to distinguish opposition groups from extremists.

“In view of the
inability of our American colleagues to separate terrorists from
opposition forces, we appeal directly to the leaders of all armed
groups: cease hostilities and withdraw from Aleppo with your
weapons,” the Defense Ministry statement said. “To do this, two
corridors will open.”

According to the
Defense Ministry, the two corridors will be specifically aimed at
rebel forces, allowing them to leave without dropping their weapons.
Six other corridors will reportedly be opened during the same period
for unarmed civilians to escape.

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